Replacing Zelensky: Does It Matter?

Peloni:  Avakov was known as the permanent minister, as he was the lone minister to remain in power as all other members of the govt were changed out, even as Poroshenko was replaced by Zelensky, serving almost 7 1/2 years in the powerful position of Interior Minister.  It ways hoped that when Zelensky finally did replace Avakov, in July 2021, that it was a signal to move the Ukrainian regime towards a peaceful resolution with Russia, but that hope lasted only a very short time.  It should be recalled that it was Avakov who formed the Battalions such as Azov , just as it was Avakov who later brought the Battalions into the Army as distinct units rather than disbanding or integrating them instead.  Avakov’s close pre-Maidan association with Andriy Biletsky, the founder of Azov and the Azov movement, led to him promoting and protecting Azov throughout his lengthy term in office.  If Zelensky is removed by the West, his replacement with Avakov should be understood to be a complete surrender to the most radical elements of the Nationalist-Nazi regime in Kiev.  Hopefully this is not the plan which the West has in mind for Ukraine.

Stephen Bryen | Weapons & Strategy | August 13, 2024

Zelensky, center left and Arsen Avakov, Center right in happier days (https://www.osw.waw.pl/en/publikacje/osw-commentary/2020-06-03/a-pillar-system-political-phenomenon-arsen-avakov)

Russia’s foreign intelligence service (SVR) says that the “west” is planning to replace Zelensky and will soon embark on a campaign to discredit himAllegedly the candidate to replace him, says the SVR, is Arsen Avakov.  He previously served as a Minister of Interior which in many countries is the organization that runs the country’s intelligence agencies (other than military intelligence which in Ukraine is placed under the military but mainly reports directly to the President). Avakov, according to the SVR, has strong links to European leaders and also to “nationalist” groups in Ukraine.

Whether the SVR report is real intelligence or simply an effort by the Russians to stir the pot in Ukraine is not at all clear.

Ties to nationalist groups means ties to organizations such as the Azov brigade.  The Azovites feature a neo-Nazi type of ideology and are one of the far-right groups operating in Ukraine.

One of the reasons the west wants to dump Zelensky, according to the SVR, is his unwillingness to negotiate with Russia unless many preconditions are accepted including a full withdrawal of the Russian army from Ukrainian territory.  Actually Zelensky’s conditions on any deal with Russia align quite well with Azov and other far right organizations, so the SVR belief that the west wants to facilitate negotiations by promoting Avakov, seems contradictory.

The Russians have been making the point for some time that Zelensky is not a legitimate leader of Ukraine as his electoral mandate expired last May and Zelensky refused to hold elections.  While there are some provisions of the Ukrainian constitution relating to the imposition of martial law that permit bypassing elections, nonetheless exploiting that constitutional loophole does not help Zelensky, whose popularity has been tanking recently.

The fact that Ukrainians are willing to show that they do not support Zelensky is fairly remarkable in a state where normal freedoms are restricted and where the press is tightly controlled.

The other problem bedeviling Zelensky is the state of the Ukrainian army and the resistance to recruiting new soldiers  Despite the incursion in Kursk, Ukraine has been steadily losing ground on the battlefield and suffering high casualties.  It isn’t clear how much longer that can go on, but it is possible that analysts in the US and Europe are starting to grasp the need to end the war before the Ukrainian edifice crumbles.

There has been a lot of swirl over the summer as various Zelensky replacements have begun to garner attention.  Most of them are old hands who have served before, and none of them necessarily have a demonstrable popular following.  Among them are the mayor of Kiev, Vitali Klitschko, former President Petro Poroshenko, and former Ukrainian President Yulia Tymoshenko.

Vitaly Klitschko is a former champion boxer and now is mayor of Kiev

It is clear that Zelensky is starting to gamble given the deteriorating conditions in the country.  That gambling is clearly evident in the Kursk invasion, but it also is manifest in attacks on sensitive installations inside Russia and elsewhere, including the drone attack in mid-August on the Zaphorize nuclear power plant (and the threat to the Kursk nuclear power plant).  These sorts of attacks threaten Russia and Ukraine, but also Europe if a massive nuclear incident occurs, just as Europe was threatened when a reactor at Chernobyl went critical in 1986 and caught fire.  Ukraine has destroyed a couple of nuclear bombers in attacks on air bases in Russia, damaged or destroyed two strategic radar stations in Russia that are part of Russia’s nuclear triad,  and (according to the Russians) are attacking civilian apartment blocks and towns and villages in the Kursk area and Belgorod. Allegedly some NATO partners have told the Ukrainians they can’t use long range weapons supplied to Ukraine for attacks on Russian territory, although there is no open evidence of the ban.

NATO is also distancing itself from the Kursk operation, although it would seem, given the use of a so-called International Brigade in the incursion, that NATO elements were involved in the planning and execution of the operation.  It is hard to be sure, but it is possible that NATO’s political leaders are not in full control of NATO command elements working in Ukraine, or alternatively that they do not want to be blamed for attacks on Russian soil given the possibility of Russian retaliation.

Most NATO partners are now saying that Russia needs to be included in forthcoming peace negotiations, but there is no agreement on the format of such negotiations or the line up of participants.  Even Zelensky is saying so. Meanwhile the Russians are saying they are not interested.  As there are no offers on the table that would draw Russia into a serious discussion, it remains to be seen if one can emerge in the near future.

The issues between Ukraine and Russia go beyond Ukraine and involve NATO, its presence in Ukraine, and the overall security framework in Europe.  The truth is no one in the west is talking about the NATO part of the equation, so replacing Zelensky won’t make any real difference until the top security issues between NATO and Russia are addressed.

August 14, 2024 | 14 Comments »

Leave a Reply

14 Comments / 14 Comments

  1. @Michael

    In my own opinion, this “operation” ranks with the tearing down of the Berlin Wall, in its impact on history.

    In its impact on history? Ranks with tearing down of the Berlin Wall? Really?? I simply have to restate Ted’s comment that I think you are being gaslighted, but bigly. Time will tell of course.

  2. The Times interview with Nina Kruscheva gives some valuable insights into the Ukraine situation. Professor Kruscheva is the great-granddaughter of Ukrainian-born Soviet leader Nikita Kruschev. Nina was educated at Moscow and Princeton, and is currently a Professor of International Affairs in the graduate program at The New School in New York.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gLGhcQPkVs

  3. Hi, Ted

    What I am saying is tha Ukraine is losing and Russia is winning.

    Let me check…

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bNH16A4f5Yk

    CNN reports that after 8 days, Ukrainian forces are still advancing, largely unopposed, and taking a large number of prisoners. Video footage is provided of all this. Ukraine is, at the same time, conducting the largest drone attacks against Russian airfields since the Russians first attacked Ukraine. Russia is pulling troops away from the areas of their most recent advances, to try to stop the Ukrainian advance.

    So far, Ukraine is obviously winning. How long will this success last? Nobody knows.

  4. Peloni,

    The war will not be turned in Kursk.

    Ah! You admit that Kursk (Russia) has been onvaded! Ted seems to have been unaware of this. Pardon me for having grown up in the Cold War, but the invasion of Russia, for the first time since WWII, was once considered a big deal.

    You speak as a prognosticator of things you think will happen; but I speak of things that have already happened. Judge for yourself, which of us is being gaslighted.

  5. @Michael
    The war will not be turned in Kursk. The only way which this might be achieved is if Russia did what Ukraine wants them to do, namely to fall back to defend the Russian homeland. This is not happening and it not going to happen. The incursion is too small, and completely immaterial to the war which is being won by Russia in Ukraine. Until that changes, and it is not likely to change, the Kursk incursion can have no meaningful impact on the Russian victory.

    While some have fairly noted that this has had a marked impact on the Ukrainian morale problem, it hasn’t changed the Ukrainian manpower problem, nor its munition or arms problems, all of which will be exacerbated by opening a new front which will place a drain on all of these. Hence, the momentary improvement in Ukrainian morale will soon face the greater deficits in these three aspect of the war which originally caused Ukraine’s morale to be in need of a distraction. And in fact, I believe we will see that the Kursk incursion as being little more than a distraction, but one which has no permanence nor prospect of bringing Ukraine victory, while still increasing the butcher’s bill.

  6. Ted, The opposite is true?? Are you saying that Russia has not been invaded? What universe do you live in?